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Finding a House in EverQuest

I felt that I had to get out there and find the player housing in EverQuest before my Station Access time expired. I have spent most of that time playing EverQuest II Extended, which is odd since I’ll still be able to play once the account lapses.

But it can be difficult to get back into EverQuest. For all my talk of playing on day one, it has been a while since the game was my main focus… like about 8 years. What an odd ratio, 3 years of play, 8 years of nostalgia… nostalgia for probably the first 12 months really.

Getting it installed went fine, as I noted previously. But since it was a fresh install, I lost all of my key mapping, which meant redoing it all again or trying to play with the default. Did we really use those keys back in 1999? It was so long ago and everything has gone WASD since.

And then there was the whole navigation aspect. I can make my way through the orginal world from memory still, and Kunark and Velious are no mystery, past that I am a bit hazy, and once we get to the Val Shir and The Plane of Knowledge, I am about out of cards. (Except for the areas put in with The Serpent’s Spine, where I did play into the 30s when that came out in 2006.) The Plane of Knowledge is still that new place that emptied out the remaining players still hanging out in the old cities, though it at least gave them one central place to hang out.

I was happy to see that they opted for the neighborhood style of housing akin to what Lord of the Rings Online offers. I haven’t finished up the post I started on LOTRO housing quite a while back, but I do like many of the aspects of it and was interested to compare it to the EQ implementation.

You get to the housing through the guild area of the Plane of Knowledge, which is one of the places you can find a lot of people (and their hired hands) hanging out.

Wow, people!

As with LOTRO, you then choose your neighborhood. The neighborhood choice panel in EQ is nice enough to give you some demographic information. Each neighborhood has 71 plots of land and the panel tells you how many have already been claimed.

Neighborhood List

71 is a lot more than you get in a neighborhood in LOTRO. To make moving around, each little section of housing has a little teleporter, there being 7 sections of approximately 10 plots of land each.

I had to search through a couple of neighborhoods before I found a plot near the entrance that was unclaimed. Unlike LOTRO, a house doesn’t come with your land. You can pick your own. They are a bit pricey though.

10K for a 3 room hut? Is this Silicon Valley?

After dropping 420 platinum coins on the land, I found that a house was a bit dear. 3 rooms houses run around 10K plat, while a 1 room runs just over 5K plat. I had to assemble some coins from other characters to get a one room shack, which is what had the lowest daily upkeep price.

Yes, you have to pay daily upkeep, in plat (42 in my case) for the house, which you arrange through the real estate management window. (Who knew EQ would ever have a window with that title!)

I thought this was a community college course

I realize that coinage had gotten out of hand, but here clearly housing differs from the EQII variety in that there is none in the new player price range. Not that there are a ton of new players in EQ, but still. And so I had my house.

New development?

All the other plots in my area had been purchased, but nobody had built anything. And after buying the house and paying some upkeep, about all I could afford was a bunny rabbit for the yard.

Albert the Bunny

So went to some other neighborhoods until I found one with houses and did what we’ve all learned to do playing RPGs and MMOs… I started walking into other people’s homes uninvited.

A more complete development

This looked pretty affluent from the outside, and on the inside there were many things to see. EQ doesn’t have the rather disappointing limitations on “stuff” that LOTRO does in its housing. A painting in one of the houses looked oddly familiar.

Why don't EQII paintings look this nice?

There was also quite a display of weaponry.

Lots of sharp objects

I let my daughter wander though houses for a bit. Now she is on Wolfshead’s side and wants to know why WoW doesn’t have housing.

And that was about it for me and EverQuest housing. Low on plat, I couldn’t experiment much. Some gnome will probably be along to reposess my house soon.

But it was nice to see how they implemented player housing in EQ.

On the plus side, I like the housing suburb idea, akin to what LOTRO has, relative to the EQII one door, many occupants. And I like that object placement has that wide-open “put it anywhere” aspect that EQII has, and that LOTRO would be well served to copy.

On the other hand, housing seems a bit pricey. No new player is going to have a house for a long, long time. I like the EQII 5 silver a week apartment option. And the empty plots that people have bought but not bothered to decorate, those are something of a downer. Some areas look like what you see flying in over Las Vegas. LOTRO’s neighborhoods never look so empty, since the house comes with the lot.

And, of course, the game is starting to really feel its age, even in a new area like this. You can get around, but convention has replaced a lot of quirks in this game from 1999.

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7 thoughts on “Finding a House in EverQuest”

Did you also buy the latest EQ expansion when you re-upped your Station Access account? That seems unlikely, but the Zam article leads off with “Housing in EverQuest, a feature introduced with the House of Thule expansion” so does this mean that the Housing has been added concurrently but independently of that expansion?

I popped in to the beta to take a look at the housing but since I wasn’t planning to buy House of Thule (my highest character is just shy of 84th and the last thing I need is yet more levels – it’s taken me ten years to get to where I am!) I promptly forgot about it.

Some EQ2 paintings look that nice or even nicer. There are some sold at the city festivals for 10 tokens that blew me away. “Felwithe at Night,” “E’ci” are the 2 that I recall off the top of my head, but there were others too.

OTOH, some of them looked like a child’s crayon drawings that had been scanned and loaded as art assets, so take that for what you will. . . .

@Bhagpuss – I violated one of the common sense rules of online shopping and made a purchase after dark when all purchases seem more reasonable. I usually put such purchases off until morning. So yes, I purchased the House of Thule expansion, which also got me the last couple I was missing.

In my defense, I lamely submit that I expected there to be an order summary page before it actually went off and did the purchase.

@pkudude99 – My carpenter has never made a painting that looks like anything more than a blurry mosaic made with pieces slightly too large for the task. But I do not claim absolute knowledge on the subject, I just cannot recall seeing any EQII painting that looked that good.

Aha! That explains it! I have a number of as-yet unplayed CDs purchased under similar circumstances.

On the topic of EQ2 paintings, the ones pkdude refers to are all competition winners, created by EQ players, so the crayon one probably WAS drawn by a child and scanned in.

The paintings you’re crafting are the ones from the original release of EQ2 I think and are not really presentative of the current quality. Even at launch, however, there were some really lovely paintings in game, but they were mostly available (still are, in fact) from city faction vendors.

Bye the bye, have you been claiming your free LoN booster packs? As a Station Access subscriber you get 5 free booster packs a month. Open each of them and you have a chance of winning a bonus in-game item, some of which are very nice.

I mention it because one thing I often win there is paintings. If you’re doing it for EQ2X you have to tick the optional LoN box at login and authorise the patcher to download EQ2X as it’s off by default.